James Wyatt believes the system of valuing short leases, which may affect two million homeowners, is a scandal whereby ordinary leaseholders lose millions

A ruling affecting perhaps two million owners of short-term leases – those flats under 80 years – was made in the Upper Tribunal of the property chamber last month (May 10).

The tribunal rejected a mathematical re-evaluation of leasehold property using a statistical methodology called hedonic regression.

This undermines the existing models used to calculate lease extensions and enfranchisement – acknowledged to be flawed – that have seen leaseholders pay millions of additional pounds to freeholders.

“This is the biggest scandal of the leasehold world,” says chartered surveyor James Wyatt, of Parthenia Valuations, who brought the case forward.

Wyatt is challenging the so-called “relativity graphs” that set the value of short leases relative to the freehold. The lower the notional value of the leases, the more owners must pay to compensate freeholders for a lease extension or to buy the freehold.

The failure of the court action is being seen as a disastrous set-back for flat owners and a boost to some of the richest freeholders in the country.

Louie Burns, of Leasehold Solutions, says that the case will see “the biggest transfer of wealth from leaseholders to freeholders since 1066”.

Indeed, in the last two weeks the position of leaseholders has become worse than it was before the case was heard as Savills has produced an updated and even more unfavourable “relativity graph” than the one that existed before. (See the Savills graph below)

With millions at stake, the case (in full below) saw leading landlord and tenant lawyers jousting in the upper tribunal.

Now it is likely to head on to the Court of Appeal and, quite possibly, the Supreme Court after that. It is an argument that will be smouldering away for years to come.

The case arose as a result of Mr Wyatt, a former head of valuations for estate agent John D Wood, deciding to subject the “relativity graphs” used in leasehold to exacting mathematical scrutiny.

“I was always perplexed why there was such an issue over relativity,” he says. “The market evidence was there for a robust mathematical model and all it needed was somebody to spend the time to analyse it.”

As a result, he set up Parthenia – which means virgin in Greek – and worked with two mathematicians to come up with an unsullied, scientific methodology to value short leases.

He received backing from Dr Philippe Bracke, of the London School of Economics and now with the Bank of England, and research student Ted Pinchbeck, whose study of leasehold values and how to reform it forms the basis of his PhD.

For the past two decades, chartered surveyors and the courts have accepted the validity of the relativity graph of Gerald Eve property consultants, who were commissioned in 1996 by the Grovesnor estate of the Duke of Westminster.

“Everyone thought there was market evidence behind it, but when our case came before the tribunal it emerged that there was none,” says Mr Wyatt.

“The graph was really just a subjective, hand-drawn line based on surveyors’ opinion of settlements for lease extensions and purchases, which were not necessarily agreed with by the surveyors acting for the other side.”

When the owners of three flats in prime central London came to Mr Wyatt to challenge the costs of extending their leases, it provided the opportunity to offer the Parthenia hedonic regression model to the approval of the property tribunal.

Two of the properties were Chelsea flats where the freeholder was the aristocratic Sloane Stanley estate: one involved a lease extension costing £420,000; the other £37,000.

A third flat was in Cranley Gardens, in South Kensington / Fulham, where the cost was £200,000 and the freeholder was the charity the Wellcome Trust.

The result was an epic, nine-day legal show down in the Upper Tribunal in late January and early February, with the ruling coming through last month.

But this was nothing compared to the other side. The Wellcome Trust was particularly nervy at this assault on its revenue streams, pointing out – irrelevantly – that the millions it receives from residential leasehold pay for cancer research.

It deployed a legal army headed by Stephen Jourdan QC, while the Sloane Stanley estate fielded barrister Anthony Radevsky and solicitors Pemberton Greenish.

The landlords also summoned up mathematical muscle in the form of Professor Colin Lizieri, Grosvenor Professor of Real Estate Finance at Cambridge University, and Professor Bryan MacGregor, of Aberdeen University.

The total cost of this lot may have been £750,000 to £1 million, it is believed.

However, both sides bore their own legal costs.

The Gerald Eve graph that has been the “anchor of the sector” went up in a puff of smoke.

“In our view, the graph was to a large degree based upon subjective, albeit informed, opinion directed to the particular requirement of the Grosvenor Estate to espouse what it considered to be ‘defensible’ relativities,” the tribunal ruled.

“Its predominant use in the market does not seem to us to depend upon the robustness of its methodology or its pre-eminence as a graph; rather it is due to its being the first of its kind and the most familiar to practitioners.”

It added:

“We accept that the GE [Gerald Eve] graph has had a very significant effect on settlements.”

Parthenia made its case: that its relativity graph is based on 8,000 items of market evidence from 1987 to 1992.

The data is therefore untainted by the effects of the Leasehold Reform, Housing and Urban Development Act 1993, which conferred rights to extend your lease or buy your freehold.

This data also pre-dated the use of the flawed Gerald Eve relativity graph that has been accepted by the sector for 20 years. As a result, all decisions in the period are wrongly weighted by it, it is argued.

But as well as acknowledging flaws in the Gerald Eve graph, the tribunal rejected the Parthenia model as “a clock that strikes 13”.

Its lease valuations, on the basis of which lease extensions would be paid, were higher than the market price actually paid for the flat.

So a flat that cost a buyer £2 million, should be valued at £2.3 million for the purpose of lease extension by Parthenia.

The tribunal did not agree.

“The [Parthenia] cannot be used as a reliable time piece and we do not consider that we have any alternative to rejecting the use of the Parthenia model.”

But the problem here is that all short term leasehold is valued, and sold, according to the flawed existing relativity graphs: the £2 million flat should have cost £2.3 million had the graphs been mathematically robust.

Obviously, the buyer of the property will have saved £300,000 on the deal, which would mitigate his losses for a lease extension. But the seller has lost out irrevocably.

Mr Wyatt said of the result: “Freeholders are absolutely cock-a-hoop with this decision. They could not have asked for anything more.

“The fundamental problem here is that everyone with the resources to develop a relativity graph – except us – works for the large freehold owning estates.”

In the last 10 days, Savills has put out a modernised relativity graph, which like Parthenia uses hedonic regression but applies its model to the data from 2010-2015.

But as lease extension costs here were made on the basis of the flawed methodology of the Gerald Eve relativity graph the figures are skewed, Mr Wyatt argues.

The result is even more imbalance, and the Savills graph is coming in lower than Gerald Eve’s!

So leaseholders are now worse off than had the case not been brought.

Mr Wyatt said: “I had to see a flat owner on Monday and tell him that the freeholder instead of demanding £1.9 million plans for an extension to his two flats, was now demanding £2.3 million.”

In other words, the legal challenge by Parthenia to the status quo is going to cost this gentleman £400,000.

“I have another one in Marylebone who was looking at a lease extension of £150,000, but it is now £240,000 under the Savills relativity graph. This transference of wealth is really a scandal.

“We argued in tribunal that leasehold prices are set too low, and the judge acknowledged that we are right: relativity graphs are set too low and are unreliable.

“But then he seems to have shrugged his shoulders and said: ‘But, you know, that is where the market is.’

Contact LKP

The leasehold game is weighted against ordinary home-owning leaseholders, who aren’t professional players. LKP was set up to redress the balance, to help you win your disputes or at least avoid disasters.

If you have a leasehold problem, you can email sok@leaseholdknowledge or take a chance on calling 07808 328 230.

Comments

Without being rude to Professor Bryan MacGregor lets be very clear Cambridge does not deploy its best mathematicians in Estate Management. Professor Bryan MacGregor is also a Land Economist by training rather than being a mathematician. The same goes for Prof John Muellbauer for the leaseholder. He is another economist rather than being a mathematical. So perhaps this may well have been seen as mostly economic argument where the maths played a lesser role?

All the models used in the case must therefore still be open to debate. Some of those models seem to go back to tentative and perhaps debatable research partly produced by one of the judges in the case many decades ago. Some of the models are more complex other look more like the sort of approximate figures surveyors sometimes tend to produce .

Perhaps the most important considerations in the case is the question of whether an Upper Tribunal has the authority to make such a broad decision and what capacity they have to make the decision that one economic model rather than another should apply.

This is a case where these can be no absolute mathematical correct answer in the same way there is no right answer in all economic debates. No matter what the judges think they can decide this is can never be just an issue of law. Ultimately this may become something the government has to review.

That Wellcome Trust feels it should profit from this sort or market suggests that someone in their ethics team should be asking is this is the right market for a charity.

News archive

Commonhold is slowly working its way into the national consciousness – 16 years after being introduced to the statute book. Last Friday, Sam Barker in the Daily Telegraph reported the Law Commission’s study of the tenure. Commonhold exists almost all jurisdictions apart from England and Wales, where flats and over a million houses are held […]

A last minute attempt to stop LKP from publishing three legal opinions extremely critical of the government’s bungled reform to Recognised Tenants’ Associations failed last week. The government introduced a statutory instrument in October that has actually made the position of leaseholders worse. The failing was referenced in the Commons by Sir Peter Bottomley with […]

This is the first of 3 articles looking at the history of the RTA project and the findings of the most recent consultation. The stated objective of Ministers since 2014 is to make it easier to form a formal residents group known as a Recognised Tenants Association (RTA). LKP has argued from the outset that […]

The APPG on leasehold and commonhold reform has asked two specialist barristers to provide formal opinions on the RTA SI which came into force on 1st November 2018. “The Tenants’ Associations (Provisions Relating to Recognition and Provision of Information) (England) Regulations 2018” The first opinion was provided by barrister Rebecca Cattermole of Tanfield Chambers. Miss […]

In this section, we look at the results of an experimental test of the RTA SI to see how it might work in practice. We then go on to draw conclusions from all three papers. A test of the RTA SI We have been able to use the leaseholders at the Charter Quay (CQ) site […]

The Leasehold Advisory Service, the government funded Leasehold Advisory Service, has been under review by the government for much of the last ten years. This seems to suggest that something is wrong, yet the government’s long-standing support for the Leasehold Advisory Service continues. LKP has, after many requests, obtained the two most recent reviews of […]

– Select Committee deluged with complaints about taxpayer funded organisation – It failed to alert government to scandals over ground rents and proliferation of leasehold houses – Why did it hold seminars advising freeholders how to exploit leaseholders? – ‘Huge credibility problem’ for LEASE among leaseholders, says MP: it is working against them – Why […]

Push for alternative to leasehold system Expansion of the commonhold system of home ownership as an alternative to leasehold tenancies has been urged by the government’s law reform adviser. Commonhold – where people own their homes without an expiring lease – was introduced 14 years ago, but has been little-used. Meanwhile, there have […]

The Help To Buy scheme that has hugely boosted plc house builders share prices – and turned the likes of Persimmon’s Jeff Fairburn and David Jenkinson into multimillionaires – is not available for commonhold properties. This astonishing revelation comes from small house builder (and former leaseholder) Stewart Moxon, of Hopton Build. He trying to selling […]

Two years after the leaseholders at Canary Riverside thought that they had escaped from the clutches of freeholder John Christodoulou after they secured a court-appointed managing agent, the legal wrangling continues. This week saw the 19th day in tribunal since Monaco-based freeholder John Christodoulou lost control of the site’s management in October 2016, when his […]

Cherry Jones has managed to drastically reduce service charges using local contractors … The epic right to manage victory at Rectory Court – where Stonewater was given the boot and the new manager is LKP-accredited Cherry Jones of Swindon-based Home from Home – has made it to the national press. The leaseholders at the 44-flat […]

LKP chair Martin Boyd and Sir Peter Bottomley attended a meeting at Number 10 yesterday to urge government to overturn its flawed statutory instrument to reform recognised tenants’ associations. The MHCLG announced changes in October and made the existing arrangements even worse for leaseholders. The key hurdle faced by leaseholders is to contact their leasehold-owning […]

The FT today reports that government hopes that speculators in residential freeholds – especially anonymous ones hidden offshore – are unlikely to pay up to remove Grenfell cladding. The article coincided with reports of Places for People, freeholder of Leeds Saxton, issuing a non-repayable loan to leaseholders and pursuing a claim against warranty provider NHBC. […]

Slough Council – which made the unaccountable decision to buy the freehold of Grenfell cladding site Nova House for £1 – was in tribunal earlier last week against a formidable opponent, Benjamin Pell, better know to journalists as Benji the Binman. Mr Pell, who came to national attention after raiding the dustbins of London’s leading […]

The government is persisting with its argument that “building owners” must pay up to remove Grenfell cladding from their sites – even though the law has said that they don’t pay, leaseholders do. The statement today from Communities Secretary James Brokenshire says: “Local authorities will get the government’s full backing, including financial support if necessary, […]

By Harry Scoffin Last month, as part of its Britain section, The Economist explored the leasehold system and recognised the work of the Leasehold Knowledge Partnership. The article starts by referencing Anis Kasmani, an unhappy Persimmon customer who bought a leasehold house at Harrow View West before house builders were shamed into abandoning the tenure […]

The Law Commissioner Professor Nicholas Hopkins has dashed hopes of early leasehold reform, telling the Law Gazette that legislative change won’t come before 2020. Speaking at a consultation exercise at the Ministry of Justice on Monday, Professor Hopkins said that his team is working to an “accelerated time-table”, but that new legislation on leasehold would […]

leasehold.reform@communities.gov.uk It is vital that as many leaseholders as possible respond to the government consultation to reform leasehold, ban leasehold houses and address ground rents. The government is pushing £10pa ground rents, which will keep the WHOLE leasehold racket going. If there is a legitimate income in residential freeholds, they will be traded and used […]

Using a flat for “immoral purposes” can be grounds for forfeiture The Sunday Times today exposes a prime London site belonging to freeholder, insurance tycoon and Conservative Party donor Christopher Moran as being full prostitutes. Many have to sell their bodies 30 times a month before they can afford the rents of £3,000 a month […]

And sector offers up yet another ‘code of practice’, this time for freeholders (whoever they may be when hidden offshore) One of the greatest fictions of the leasehold sector is that freeholders – even anonymous offshore ones – are the only reliable long-term stewards of a block of flats. The leasehold owners would be incapable, […]